Obama has outlined a strategy for America, in great depth. Read all about Change.gov!
I recently completed the project for ME12S, the Machining class I’ve been taking: an Air Motor (photos of mine). The class has really rekindled my love for making things with my hands, and I’m racking my brain for more fun things I could find an excuse to build.
So, what’s an air motor? Basically, you can hook it up to a compressed air line or a pump, and it converts that force into rotation. I couldn’t capture an image of it running, but it goes pretty fast. How useful is it? Not at all, really. But it gave me a chance to learn how to use Band Saws, Drill Presses, Lathes, Mills, and how to polish, measure, tap, and lots of other techniques on metal and plastics. Combined with my previous experience working with wood, I’m starting to feel fairly proficient at building things. Next, I need to find an electronics/circuits course!
Why am I interested in these classes? Several reasons, I guess. Firstly, it’s very satisfying to see a final product that you made with your own hands. I think that’s the biggest motivation. But it’s also a skill-set that I could always advertise that I have as an extra perk, and it will help in the case of a collapse of society, I guess. Lastly, I’m always a little jealous of engineers– with most engineering work, you can explain the benefit of what you’re doing in just a sentence or so. With my research (and believe me, I’ve tried), I can’t give an accurate impression of what I do in less than two paragraphs. And to add “why is this useful” adds another paragraph or two. So the accessibility factor is lacking. With a real product, at least you can point to it and say, “I did this.”
Anyway, does anyone else have any recent crafts handiwork to show off? (I know you do, shortspeedfreak– I’m sure of it)
Get your practice… as I’m wholeheartedly contributing to the collapse of society… one twisted mind at a time. Thats what I always I always thought that art was such a perfect counterpoint for a career in science. In science youare doing completely intangible experiments for (supposedly) a very specific idea. However in art you are doing soething very concrete for a completely nonspecific idea. It allows your mind to unwind, like a yoyo…. then reality sets in where you have to work for ludacris numbers of hours in the day and then by the time you get home your mind feels like overcooked spaghetti and youre so exhausted you couldn’t come up with an original idea if your life depended on it.
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Obama has outlined a strategy for America, in great depth. Read all about Change.gov!
Okay, I’ll admit that it’s entirely possible that I am the last person to learn about this website*, but it’s really addictive. It’s a game that tests your vocabulary. Each time you get a word’s meaning correct, 20 grains of rice are donated to the UN World Program. So, give Free Rice a whirl. I bet you’ll have fun and you’ll get to help make strides toward ending hunger.
*I heard about it forever ago, I just never actually looked at it.
This band decided they didn’t have money to make a video, so they set up in public places in view of security cameras, then asked to get the footage from the people.
Pretty cool results, though a little creepy to think how much these cameras are around.
A news story about it is here
Thanks to one of my favorites blogs, Zooillogix, I recently got to see toads giving live birth from their back and frogs without lungs. I must say, amphibians are weird! But do those frogs really count as amphibians…? And honestly, those toads gross me out a bit — and that’s hard for biology to do to me!
According to a recent anonymous poll in Nature magazine. Further commentary at WebMD. Crazy, huh?
Trunk Monkey. Yes this is exactly what you think it is (check out ep 4 theft retrieval system)
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Paradoxdruid (Vote!): WE DID IT! Now, go check out http://change.gov/
ShortSpeedFreak (Vote!): I voted on Friday. It was awesome. Since I was just dropping off a mail-in ballot, I...
Paradoxdruid (Vote!): Well said, styopa! You’re lucky to be in Colorado, where you don’t awaken every...
Taylor (The Housing Crunch): Good synopsis, check this out: http://www.indypende nt.org/2008/10/02...
styopa (The Housing Crunch): If you haven’t already heard these This American Life articles, then I highly...
Ted (The Housing Crunch): Houses aren’t necessarily certain to fall back to sustainable levels. They could just...
Paradoxdruid (The Housing Crunch): Yes, I’m commenting on my own post. I just read bob Cringeley’s take...
Amy (Nihongo, err Japanese): ahh~~ looking forward to honeymoon already? you always plan so~ ahead. hope your guys...
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